|
|
|
Back to Daily Updates
by Anthony Carew
fest favourites:
by Michelle Carey
Top 10
by Adrian Danks
15 best films (in preferential order):
Tribute (Rich Fox & Kris Curry, 2001) Love and Anarchy: The Wild Wild World of Jamie Leonarder (Brendan Young, 2001) Blue Vinyl (Judith Helland, 2001) Rainbow Bird & Monster Man (Dennis K. Smith, 2001) Take Care of My Cat (Jeong Jae-Eun, 2001)
2 major disappointments:
15 worst films (in least preferential order):
by Spiro Economopoulos
My festival faves (in no particular order):
The Son (Dardenne Bros., 2002)
by Mark Freeman MIFF 2002 seemed to take longer to yield the pleasures and surprises that characterised last year's Festival, with the standard a little lower. This year, lumbered with an awkward but topical theme of Crossing Borders, the selection featured an inordinately skewed selection of films that tried hard and failed. Indeed, for the first half of the Festival, film after film aimed for something new and just rehashed something old not too many borders crossed there. In the later stages, though, much stronger work surfaced, cinema that was simple and never pretended to be otherwise, or work that was complex and still managed to maintain that complexity without resorting to easy answers or faux edginess. The end result for me, at any rate, was an even slate inspiring, evocative works like Tsai Ming-Liang's What Time Is It There? and Damien Odoul's Deep Breath, balanced out by ho-hum efforts like Sono Sion's Suicide Club and Mostéfa Djadjam's Borders. The following list of films, at least, reminded me of why I love cinema, and the way MIFF succeeded, in part, to sate this city's hunger for interesting, intelligent works. The Son (Dardenne brothers, 2002) If the Dardenne brothers' earlier film Rosetta was one of the best things in cinema over the past couple of years, then The Son more than ably lives up to its predecessor. Too often handheld realist cinema feels overly fabricated or artfully orchestrated yet the Dardennes consistently manage to erase obvious style while also ensuring it remains a significant element in our gut response. This story, simple in its narrative, is presented with such a lack of artifice that the film really does suggest that any occurrence, any outcome is possible. The camera may jostle and bump at the characters shoulders, but within minutes The Son erases its erratic movement and becomes our own personal vision as we jockey for position to eavesdrop on a slowly unfolding drama. The success of the film stems from our growing suspicion of the motives of the characters their intentions are inscrutable, but only in the way strangers often are. The result is something perfectly simple yet emotionally complex. Beautiful stuff. What Time Is It There? (Tsai Ming-Liang, 2001) Another film that is brave enough to let itself play out in its own time, What Time Is It There? has a beautiful fluidity, slipping through spaces, locations and time with grace and often biting humour. It's the seemingly casual connections that bond people together that makes this film, sometimes by a brief conversation or an idea or concept, yet the apparent tenuousness of these connections become powerful, virtually unbreakable. Tsai turns time around, exposing the concept in all its facets, its role in longing and loss and yearning for things past, its function in making us feel trapped, boxed in, impatient for a future. And it demonstrates the circularity of things, the way time seems to spin and return upon itself, repeating and revisiting prior experience and tweaking it slightly, as if the characters are part of a lengthy joke and perhaps they are. There's more in this than one screening can grant it is not just a film about time, but one that requires it. Y Tu Mamá También (Alfonso Cuarón, 2001) There are those dismissive of this film simply because it is, as they say, a crowd pleaser, as if somehow such a concept were a dirty word in cinema. But forgetting such preciousness and enjoying Y Tu Mamá También for what it is provides the key into this invigorating, funny Mexican film, which has deservedly garnered praise overseas following a theatrical release. The great thing about Y Tu Mamá También is that it takes very simple, obvious generic traits (the road trip, the teen sex comedy, the experienced older woman and the eager-to-learn horny teenagers) and turns it into a frank, mature exploration of teenage machismo and sexuality. Cuarón's film just proves how impossibly infantile much of the American approach to similar themes has been: the sex is clumsy, but tender, the boys bravado slowly stripped away as their maturity grows. It's funny and sweet without being puerile and nasty a film that sets itself some clear parameters and beautifully traverses areas so rarely explored in other films of this ilk. Cuarón's ability to use the frame to both bind and separate Luisa from the boys is one of the film's finer pleasures. Deep Breath (Damien Odoul, 2000) This was the surprise highlight of the Festival for me my decision to see it based purely on a desire to get a decent seat at the subsequent screening of Scorsese's Il Mio Viaggio in Italia. As it turned out, Deep Breath proved to be one of the best things I saw. Magnificently shot and intelligently constructed, it follows its teenage protagonist David through one day on his uncle's farm. Odoul presents this boy/man through the spectrum of masculine identity and David, on the cusp of manhood himself, seems lost and unsure how to behave, understanding little of what is expected of him as a man. Odoul slips David's history into the narrative almost unobtrusively, a simple photo of the boy surrounded by women is all the information needed to contextualise his existence away from the farm. Odoul presents the boy's search without sentimentality, but with enough care that we want him to succeed it's just that his choices for role models on the farm are so limited. Interspersed with the realist drama are stark dreamlike images, sequences that stem from modern dance, choreographed like a ballet; rough masculinity expressed as performance art. It's not just the subject but its mode of expression that is so bold. This was a tremendous film more provocative and insightful, it turned out, than the Scorsese film that inspired my decision to attend in the first place. Divine Intervention (Elia Suleiman, 2002) This had a wonderful, wry humour reminiscent of Tati that slowly builds into something else by the film's conclusion. Exploring the nature of territory and occupancy, Suleiman uses humour on the micro level then slowly builds drama on a much wider scale. It's a film that knows how to use space and pattern, clever repetitions, looming emptiness that is suddenly filled with form it's a very knowing approach to storytelling. And whilst it may appear initially rather light, as Divine Intervention continues its purpose is unveiled slowly and delicately with the comedy comes fear, anger, revolt, triumph. It's almost a silent film, but its use of visual language made it one of the more carefully communicated films of the Festival. Others I really enjoyed: Yi Yi (Edward Yang, 2000); Hideo Nakata's Dark Water (2002); Richard Kelly's Donnie Darko (2001); Miike Takashi's insane, absurd The Happiness of the Katakuris (2002); and James Ellroy's Feast of Death (Vikram Jayanti, 2001). And The Tracker (Rolf De Heer, 2002) was damn close to being terrific, if only it hadn't pushed its message so insistently. It was still an impressive, thoughtful approach to a subject we just can't quite seem to get right on film. Scorsese's Il Mio Viaggio in Italia certainly achieved its aim to demonstrate Scorsese's love for Italian cinema and to convey the director's enthusiasm for his favourite directors. It is, though, fairly superficial in its discussion, and I wanted a greater insight into exactly what things these directors did that really got Marty all excited in his formative years much like he does in his discussion of Visconti's Senso. But this is more of a love song than an intellectual exercise and to his credit, Scorsese is up front about his intentions on that score. There were also some inclusions in the program that ran the middle ground or sometimes lower. Mostéfa Djadjam's Borders seemed to get a showing because of its relevance to this year's theme rather than for anything particularly exceptional in the film itself. There were some OK documentaries the Maya Deren was fairly interesting but others like The Tramp and the Dictator (Kevin Brownlow, 2001) seemed to be squeezed into a premise that prevented anything beyond the basic concept to find a way in. Teesh and Trude (Melanie Rodriga, 2002) was a white trash lower class comedy for blue trash middle class mentalities. Condescending, uninteresting, and not terribly funny, it's designed so we laugh at them, because thank God that's not (and never could be) us. I did enjoy Michael Winterbottom's 24 Hour Party People (2002) despite the fact that it's a bit all over the place as a film. It captures the mood and the music, and not much else, but the mood and the music were good enough for me to disengage my brain and enjoy the songs, even if I learnt next to nothing about the people that made them. Other films like Fausto 5.0 and Suicide Club looked like they were going to be something truly exceptional but squandered everything except their nice production design they were disappointing. Overall this year, an OK festival, let down I thought by too many films with too few ideas and not enough gumption. This is not to deny that there were some great films on show just not quite as many as I might have liked. The ticketing system was much improved this year, and those working at the cinemas were patient, helpful and kept their sense of humour: a great job. I did feel the lack of interaction this year, with the Q & A's a little more sparse, and often more difficult to attend with every session running late for most of the Festival. A number of films also have an imminent release Y Tu Mamá También, The Tracker, Insomnia and others will appear over the next month. It makes their inclusion in the Festival seem a little redundant. And, if I were to make one request, it would be for fewer films and more screenings the breadth of the selection makes MIFF almost feel bloated, and more particularly this year with the inclusion of some substandard fare. Greater access to fewer films would make me a happier, more contented filmgoer, and would eradicate my concern that I had to overlook Fred Wiseman's Domestic Violence (2002) for a chance to see Yi Yi. Still, another fine effort from the MIFF team in juggling films, times and tempers: we look forward to next year (and a really good retrospective, please!).
by Rhys Graham
Films that made my pulse quicken at this year's MIFF:
What Time Is It There? (Tsai Ming-Liang, 2001) Tsai Ming-Liang seems unrivalled in creating narratives of solitude. With the lightest touch and performances so tightly honed even the slightest motion or breath seems carefully choreographed (I had a moment where I was sure the goldfish must have been following directions, too), What Time is it There? is my pick for most soulful film of the Festival. The resonance of dreams across distance, romantic yearning, loss and superstition intertwine in the lead character's lives as Tsai explores contemporary isolation in a similar landscape to The Hole and The River. What takes this a notch above his other extraordinary works is that it is also a love song for cinema and his use of Truffaut's Les Quatre cents coups as a kind of spiritual medium between a young man in Taiwan and the woman he might have loved in Paris is truly beautiful. Film bliss. The Son (Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardennes, 2002) Taking the kinetic, visceral observations of Rosetta to the point of almost bucking the viewer off, The Son is another Dardennes Bros. film that lingers closer to the skin than any other film I can recall. The precision of the narrative in this film leaves me speechless; information is revealed in tiny, shining increments, each moment heightening the emotional intensity to almost unbearable levels. Despite its other strengths, despite its portrait of self-destructive and obsessive compulsion, I could love this film for one scene alone: that in which the young boy physically measures the distance between himself and the man who is separated from him by an unbridgeable emotional abyss. Divine Intervention (Elie Suleiman, 2002) Perhaps for a Palestinian filmmaker, any filmmaker, only surrealism and absurdity can really articulate the events of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. I found this to be an unbearably tense film; moments of stylised violence and conflict, moments of humour, and moments of sheer absurdity compounding to create a sense of frustration, confusion and despair. Intelligent use of CG effects add to this unique film, and the way that it explores the movement of characters in space as an emotional terrain suggests the films of Tati, while the dreamlike surrealism seemed to suggest something of Buñuel. A forceful political statement. Sleeping Rough (Eugenie Jansen, 2002) One of a number of simple, impressive realist films in the Festival. This story of the strange association between a Sudanese boy and an elderly Dutch war veteran is quietly observed, sensual, and deeply humane. Moments unfold carefully and the growing friendship is never overplayed. A mythic bookend to the film might have been clumsy but seemed natural emerging from the camera's concentration on the possible inner lives and thoughts of the two very different men. Interestingly, Sleeping Rough, with its effortless naturalism, is directed by a documentary filmmaker whose work emerges from the rich tradition of Dutch documentary making. Sadly, I can't imagine this film getting a release. In Praise Of Love (Jean-Luc Godard, 2001) While I have to confess to missing large portions of the narrative, it was exciting to see Godard doing what he does best; living and breathing through the rhythms and images of his filmmaking. At times, I am sure the hypnotic pace in the first section (black and white film) was best perceived as an organic experience cuts like heartbeats, images that kept me halfway between waking and dreams. The second part (saturated video), on the other hand, had such intellectual precision in tying together Godard's propositions that I wish I could have the film script to reread. Given Godard's extensive use of video it is not at all surprising to see him using DV in this film in a way that truly exploits and enhances the qualities of the medium rather than trying to use it as an excuse for film. A Wedding In Ramallah (Sherine Salama, 2002) A truly great Australian documentary, funny and touching in its exploration of love and marriage under siege in the occupied town of Ramallah. While two brothers emigrate to the USA, their wives wait in bullet-riddled apartments for visas to join them. Both marriages are arranged and there is an impressively candid exploration of the pressure of creating an emotional bond out of social formality. Senora and Mariam, the two cynical, witty and hardened wives trying their best to hold onto dreams of happiness, love and family, are compelling characters and their dim perception of the doco-maker is highlighted during one great scene. Their lives, viewed at a distance, seem grindingly bleak, and their husbands are almost comically unpleasant, but their strength within their surroundings is deeply affecting. Yi Yi (Edward Yang, 2000) Something like the experience of an epic family novel, this film took me, with measured, beautiful visuals and striking performances, deep into the heart of a Taiwanese family and the troubles that dwell quietly beneath the surface of their daily interactions. Worth all the praise heaped on it. Borders (Mostéfa Djadjam, 2000), Baran (Majid Majidi, 2001), Delbaran (Abolfazl Jalili, 2001) These three narrative features have a resounding impact in the bitter, hostile little world we live in around these parts. Majidi transcends the simple tale told in Baran of the love between an Iranian boy and an Afghani woman into a statement of the impossibility of love in a world in which human values are made meaningless (by the burkha, by laws regarding refugees). Djadjam's Borders is an involving character drama about a group of African men who pay to be people-smuggled into Europe but, of course, end up in tragic circumstances. Delbaran, the weakest of the three, combines poetic visual sequences and narrative minimalism with moments of documented observation, to tell of a remote road stop where illegal Afghani refugees take shelter. Each of these films displays a complex perspective on issues that are ridiculously oversimplified in this country. Baran and Borders particularly, are emotional statements that, viewed in the context of the political currents of the last year, reveal much about the disparity between human experience and state policies. I would suggest Baran and Delbaran be placed against Arnie's Collateral Damage as a study in post-September 11 cinema!
other highlights:
To Be and To Have Deep Breath Simple, lyrical and sensuous portrait of a reckless young boy living in rural France. Unknown Pleasures Digital filmmaking at its best; careful character studies and a charged impression of the bleak industrial surrounds of northern China.
by Chris Howard
Also, seeing such heartily-attended sessions for films such as these led me to contemplate the much smaller audiences that frequented MUFF screenings, and to reconsider, for example, what I had thought a terrific coup for MUFF, obtaining a brand new print of Walerian Borowczyk's extraordinary La bête (1975); while it drew a good crowd at MUFF, surely, had MIFF have programmed and promoted it in their somewhat shabby (certainly by festival's end!) catalogue, full houses of the order of that which left the unsubtitled screening of Avalon I attended could all have appreciated the considerable trouble gone to in bringing the great maverick Polish-born director's erotic surrealist masterpiece to Melbourne for, as frugality demanded, but a single screening. Ah well, perhaps this will also help ensure that more folk are more attentive to MUFF's programming in future. So these sort of tired musings were to affect my MIFF 2002 experience some though serving to encourage me with my MUFFing (seeing MIFF cock-up and in damage-control mode projected large with such as Avalon helped me feel better about on occasion having to do the same for lesser-witnessed cock-ups for MUFF!), but also other times impinging upon my enjoyment, whether piecemeally or wholly, of some of the films, nonetheless my highlights of the 51st MIFF, listed below in no particular order: Brothers Quay In particular, the extremely beautiful and enigmatic Street of Crocodiles, which I could happily watch, utterly entranced, if it were looped for hours. A good thing the Quays' films are largely available for home watching through Zeitgeist Films in the US. Teenage Hooker Became Killing Machine in Daehakroh Especially for the casting of someone who looked uncannily like a demented Jack Palance, and for his part in that dance sequence. And for just being so joyously inconsequential! Dead or Alive For its hyper-kinetic first reel, for the Douglas Sirk on Heat middle section replete with irregular and mostly irrelevant deadpan irruptions of Miike craziness and for its truly preposterous finale, which, unlike for some people I spoke to, for me brilliantly capped off a terrific film rather than spoilt it! Dead or Alive 2 Much bitsier than the first, but with some great moments if a less cohesive film overall. This one made me think of Sonatine (Takeshi Kitano, 1993), with gangsters playing silly games beach-side in their downtime, yet with violence never far away. And I loved the justification for their work as hired assassins to save the starving millions! This also though worried me as I feared awhile that it almost made sense, after a Milo Minderbinder-esque fashion It also had a very funny cameo at the start from Shinya Tsukamoto. I'm far from accustomed to him being funny! Happiness of the Katakuris Just plain silly and very scattershot so lots of fun, and lotsa laughs! Georgie Girl A terrific doco on New Zealand's transsexual MP Georgina Beyer, and timely too just post-screening, she's been re-elected by even greater a margin than that with which first saw her installed in The Beehive. A rather inspirational piece I should think, especially to any out there whose otherness might at times weigh upon them. With great archival footage of a Wellington 'exotica' scene I was rather too busily involved with seeing out my infancy to have been greatly cognizant of at the time! (I grew up in Wellington.) Dark Water Hideo Nakata turns it on again and provides once more an object lesson to contemporary horror filmmakers in economy, pacing, the benefits of full characterisations whilst working with 'types' and conventions, and in the gentle accumulation of dread. Donnie Darko Wonderful first feature, which reminded me of Better Off Dead (Savage Steve Holland, 1985) in its successful amalgamation of quotidian teen goings-on and concerns with a little grotesquerie and hyperbole and yet with a Twilight Zone-like twist to it all, which could perhaps lay the ground for a sequel missing its eponymous lead character! Film Ist 7-12 Most enjoyable, occasionally very droll montage of silent movie clips from much farther and broader afield than the MIFF catalogue promised (just because the director's name was 'Deutsch' doesn't mean all the material he was working with was likewise!). Great soundtrack too. Take Care of My Cat A perfectly charming slice o' life piece from a Korean first-timer. I think it could happily have gone on for considerably longer I'm the more convinced of this for feeling this way despite my exhaustion with its being the final MIFF film I saw, on the very closing night of the festival! Love and Anarchy: The Wild Wild World of Jaimie Leonarder This I'm listing more for its subject matter and for some wonderful archival footage than for any great finesse in its crafting, which I felt was slightly lacking. But having met Jaimie just weeks previous, when he and partner Aspasia came down from Sydney to co-present some fun sex education and hygiene screenings with Jack Sargeant at MUFF, I got quite a kick out of this doco, for Leonarder is one of the most charming and caring people I've ever met (refer Jim Knox's write-up on this film in the Daily Reports, who summed him and his work up beautifully). With Jaimie and Aspasia having just presented some more screenings in Melbourne just last week, perhaps now is their time and some long-overdue recognition outside of Sydney's fringes theirs to enjoy, after so many years of tirelessly championing culture and society's marginalia most encouraging for all struggling like-minded folk! Making Venus Very enjoyable, documenting the protracted production of a local low budget feature film that somehow one knew was doomed from this doco's outset. This film also had the good grace not to revel too much in the irony of its own successful, wholly epiphytic existence While more and more of other people's money was forever being thrown at The Money Shot and its changing personnel and titles, blowing out by the film's close to over a million big ones, Making Venus ultimately was made for how much?
by Jim Knox
Too far busy (and frugal!) to take in so much of MIFF, but here's choice moments. 1) SHOOT! SHOOT! SHOOT! Most of this stuff was a complete revelation, and heaps more engaging than I'd expected. Shame about the diminutive audience; there'd be less pedestrian digital work if contemporary artists chose to make informed viewing of their precursors (many of whom were very far in advance of them.). 2) Brothers Quay Retrospective Magical and haunting, these films are among the most confoundingly great cinema since the earliest Buñuels. A rare treat to gain repeated close viewings of their animation - I fell into the act of collating an incomplete inventory of their obsessions (telegraph wire, disembodied hands, ladders, cross-hatching, fur etc). I had to weep at the humility with which they so beautifully honour their mentor in The Cabinet of Jan Svankmajer; In Absentia still stuns after repeated viewings, but definitely benefits by its score being played-back at an appropriate volume (i.e. loud - this isn't some anodyne rock promo clip, it's actually intended to communicate *distress* to its audience). Most surprising here was the dance work, Duet, which made me long for the inclusion of their absent ETA Hoffman adaptation, The Sandman. Other omissions: their advertising commissions - award winning works for Fox and Honeywell are more inventive and inspired than any of their rock-clips (expedient day-work, these last; which play like a less-able animator attempting to imitate their visual style). 3) Jeunet and Caro Retrospective Inconsistent, but welcome nonetheless. Some of their titles might have been translated by Systranet (Le bunker de la derniere rafale is The Bunker of the Last Burst of Gunfire, not The Last Burst Bunker!), but the works themselves impress as a triumph of visual imagination. Foutaises is a delightful catalogue of likes and dislikes, with an audacious edit; but Le bunker. was the rare gem in this collection - the most studied interrogation of a crypto-homo/post-Bauhaus/Nuremberg aesthetic I've ever seen, with brutally crafted musique concrete sound design by the Parazite group (and nice to see French cartoonist, Bruno Richard, in a rare cameo!). 4) Film Ist. 7-12 I was ambivalent about Gustave Deutsch's preceding Film Ist. 1-6 when it screened at MIFF in (I think) 1998 - despite some occasionally evocative imagery, it just seemed too long for its initial premise. Film Ist. 7-12 is refreshingly fun and funny - a game with cinematic discontinuity that builds startling new narratives from some historical trends in silent cinema. While always sensitive to his source material, Deutsch has created a playful dialogue with cinema's origins; and Fennesz's score is perfectly counter pointed to the image. 5) Blue Vinyl Disappeared to its single, Saturday am screening, this one passed almost unnoticed. Guerrilla-doco in the style of Mike Moore; very warm and human; co-director Judith Helfand applies a light, self-deprecating touch - beautifully balanced to the often chilling fruits of her enquiry. 6) All About Lily Chou-Chou Couldn't make it to this one myself, but my Asian-cinema-aficionado little Sister tells me it was the best thing she saw! Unaccountably Absent!!! 1) The new Miyazaki anime, Spirited Away. Apparently even better than Kiki's Delivery Service (screened in MIFF's Studio Ghibli retrospective, 1998); after last year's successful release of Princess Monoke, this would've pulled thousands. And sure, it'll most likely receive a commercial release but in the context of the existing anime content, its absence defeats programming (and commercial!) logic. 2) The new Chytilova, Expulsion From Paradise. The IMDB rap promises astonishing new assaults on reason by the Daisies-helmer; this one screened at BIFF a week-and-a-half prior - Melbourne audiences will probably never get the chance to see it. 3) New works by Michael Snow, Alexander Sokurov, Peter Watkins, and Seijun Suzuki. Ditto the above. The author acknowledges that his previous posting to this site was an ill-conceived diatribe; instead of serving any documentary purpose, it merely illustrated the writer's complete exhaustion (after organising the Mu-Meson Archives screening, regular film society screening, etc). To the writer's discredit, it contained several inaccurate and offensive statements - specifically in relation to Adrian Martin's criticisms of the Thomas Pynchon documentary in The Age, which Martin did express criticism on three times throughout the Festival. Forgiveness is very sincerely asked of all persons who may have suffered any undeserved grief or harm as a result. And while the author maintains that cinema is a necessary subject for serious and dedicated enquiry, he has never believed that such enquiry should compromise upon the principles of civil fellowship to which he, more usually, aspires. Sorry. Senses of Cinema also apologises to Adrian Martin for erroneously publishing the inaccurate and untruthful criticisms made against him in Jim Knox's previous entry.
by Sam Pupillo
To Be and To Have (Nicolas Philibert, 2002) Cinémathèque please show Rouquier's Farribique and Biquefarre or Luc Mollet's The Comedy of Work again very soon. This was another film like Elia Suileman's Divine Intervention that is too beautiful for this world! Unknown Pleasures (Jia Zhang-Ke, 2002) Wow, what can you say, but this guy has to be the most interesting director around at the moment. Tsai Ming-Liang shows the forces of emotions, Hou Hsiao-Hsien the forces of history, and Jia Zhang-Ke the forces of economics and its fun. Straub does Cassavetes! I'm not going to forget the "smoking kisses" in a hurry: two of my coolest moments in films at the Festival this year. I've started using Unknown Pleasures as a yardstick, so I've been pretty tough on "existential" and romantic focused films. After Unknown Pleasures, they have to be pretty focused and honest to escape the criticism of "belly gazing" for me. What Time is it There? (Tsai Ming-Liang, 2001) This is not just a crazy spirit story of loneliness and alienation. This is a movie about life, death and time passing á la Ozu. Worthy of sitting next to Ozu's I was Born But , There was a Father and A Story of Floating Weeds (silent). Yi Yi (Edward Yang, 2000) Another wow. One my greatest movies of all time I think. Antonioni does Ozu of Ohayo (Good Morning)! Dysfunctional family story, like the recent Moretti's The Son's Room, but richer, more ambivalent and a not so "happy ending". Clocks in at nearly three hours, but a beautifully paced and constructed movie I felt. My Brother the Vampire (Sven Taddicken, 2001) Getting My Brother Laid is the cynical, nasty title that this incredibly inventive, energetic and sweet movie got but does not deserve! The sort of film What's Eating Gilbert Grape could have been if it was made by a healthier and more honest film culture. Like in To Be and To Have, turtles will rock cinematically! Honourable mentions to Divine Intervention, Take Care of My Cat and Address Unknown.
by Angelo Salamanca
The Bench For its no-nonsense depiction of a lost soul pickled in alcohol.
Cry Woman
Deep Breath
Every Day God Kisses Us On The Mouth
The Execution of Wanda Jean
Getting My Brother Laid
In the Mirror of Maya Deren
Minor Mishaps
Night Shift
The Orphan of Anyang
Paradox Lake
Red Satin
The Safety of Objects
The Son
Song for Martin
Take Care of My Cat
What Time is it There?
Y Tu Mamá También
by Fiona A. Villella
What Time is it There? And those perhaps less precious but just as prized:
Weekend Plot Luckily, I had had a chance to catch many other precious, prized films at other film festivals earlier in the year: Silence we're rolling; Dream Work; In the Memory of Maya Deren; Yi Yi; Tape; Wild Innocence. A few comments on the Festival overall and its editorial line. I would so much prefer a festival that was less consumerist and much more political, daring, and genuinely bold in all aspects. There is no denying the reality of finance and meeting costs, but surely the inclusion of films with distribution or the 'crowd-pleasers' means the equal inclusion of those films that are non-mainstream or 'difficult'. Though retrospectives of young, contemporary filmmakers are valued, it is just as important to feature retrospectives of 'important' filmmakers from the past. This recognition and celebration of film history is a vital ingredient to any film festival that truly aims to serve the local cinephile or film enthusiast community. One thing that MIFF certainly does, however, is to bring out and bring together the local film community; and most of all, to generate discussion, criticism and feedback. In this way, we experience that fleeting but wonderful moment where people are articulating what they love and what they hate about cinema, culture and criticism. Always a good thing, and what this local film culture could benefit so much more from.
|
contents great directors cteq annotations top tens about us links archive search